Semifinals. Suffering or Smiling? Love Them or Hate Them?

It is said that guilt and fatalism are intrinsic elements of Jewish culture. I may have repudiated most of the outward signs of my heritage but in this one fundamental aspect I celebrate and sustain my origins by watching Tottenham Hotspur. The experiences of generations of a proud, oppressed and wandering people have distilled themselves into this single phenomenon. I think of it as one of civilisation’s crowning achievements.  Moments of pleasure and enjoyment are swiftly and decisively countered by waves of doubt washing over me. Football as a metaphor for life. Three up with five minutes to go but disaster lurks whenever the ball enters our half. And I don’t even have a bowl of tsimmus waiting for me when I get home.

And that’s just an ordinary match. Semi-finals represent torture at their most refined form, an ordeal worse than being stretched on the rack, watching Arsenal win the League twice at the Lane or even viewing the latest Halifax ad. No other event in the world of sport contains a capacity simultaneously for blinding elation and total destruction. There are two main elements in the volatile and toxic mix. One, reaching a semi-final represents no reward in itself, winning is everything. Second, no matter what the weather, the form book or the line-up, the day always begins with a heady, absurd wave of optimism. Some reach for the emotional props like ‘it’s a one-off’, ‘we can beat anyone on our day’ or, latterly for anyone playing the Sky four, ‘their main priorities lie elsewhere’.  Truth lurks here but logic has little bearing come semi-final morning. Wembley and blind unreasoning optimism fill our senses and there is no escape from the sirens’ rapture.

In the past, Herculean tasks were presented as obstacles to sacred bliss, such as rising at 4am, round trips of several hundred miles, jam-packed terraces and no food supply, not to mention the Villa Park toilets. These labours were brushed aside, merely part and parcel of our ritual devotion. Travelling to the grounds was one of the great pleasures of being a fan that have been lost since Wembley became the permanent venue. Not only did Wembley retain its mystique and kudos, a privilege  earned by victory at the highest level, the journey also allowed us to take over other grounds for a day and heightened the sense of anticipation once the destination had been reached. We looked out for navy blue and white on the motorway and waved greetings to total strangers, united with a single purpose. The excitement was ridiculous – look, another Spurs fan, on the way to the game! Hardly a coincidence when you think about it, but remember, logic has no place here. In later years, with a more expensive (company) car we glided past the chugging jalopies and straining vans, loaded with 8 or 10 people in the back. We jeered at the limo, broken down in the fast lane. Teach them to go posh, not on a day like today, this isn’t a day out, this is about being there, being there for the win.

Before kick-off, there was another distinctive feature of the semi-finals – the noise. In those days, over 90% of the tickets went to fans so we would populate virtually half the ground. Spurs fans being Spurs fans, often it would be more as we will always find a way… In contrast, finalists would receive as few as 20,000 tickets each with the majority going to the ‘football family’. Having a large family is typically a mixed blessing and if they wanted to stay in touch, they could have sent a bloody Christmas card and leave the tickets to the rest of us.

Then comes the Semi-final Moment, the truly distinctive feature of all semis. It arrives usually at some point in the first half but the specific instant varies according each individual. It remains as a law of nature, immutable and unchanging as the rising and setting of the sun. The Semi-final Moment comes when the thought enters your head that we could lose. For me it’s usually about 20 minutes in, when the frantic opening skirmishes are over and the match settles into some sort of pattern, although it does not matter if we are on top or under the cosh, for this is not about reality or an analysis that we will lose, it’s the mere concept of defeat, inconceivable until the Moment. The euphoria dissipates and the realisation seeps into the mind. Gone is the joy and anticipation, to be replaced by gut-wrenching, stomach-churning sickening fear that proceeds to occupy body and mind for the remainder of the match. We’ve come this far yet might not make it. Only with the final whistle comes blessed relief.

Old Trafford, 2001, the perfect example. Not a vintage season by any means, we nevertheless stagger through to the semis, along the way carelessly jettisoning the man who got us there. But no one liked ‘Man in the Raincoat’ and Hoddle’s appearance before the match was greeted as that of the new Messiah. As much as we sang, United turned up the PA to drown it out. Unthinkable that the fans can have their day, untroubled and without interference. I daresay the PA is switched off as soon as the TV coverage begins, usually with the words ‘great’ and ‘atmosphere’ in the commentator’s carefully scripted impromptu opening remarks.

Getting there presented a challenge in itself. Some friends of mine had recently been to Old Trafford with West Ham and they said how easy the coach journey had been. The Hammers put on free coaches for their fans as a reward for loyal support: that wasn’t likely with the Spurs board but it was cheap so I booked up for me and my two children, then in their early teens, their first semi-final. My friends said that each of their coaches was numbered and lined up round Upton Park at the appointed time, so find your coach and you were off. But this is Spurs, and we are loyal fans…so we rise at 4am, drive 30 miles to the Lane and join the orderly queue at 6.30. Then 2 hours of bedlam. The coaches appeared at various intervals and stopped at random points on the High Road. The two police officers had no idea what was happening and it became a free for all. Tempers understandably frayed as this simple operation became what was in one sense a farce but actually was decidedly dangerous for the many children present, including mine. Eventually we forced our way onto a coach that happened to pull up where were standing, and  a few kind souls helped my offspring to the head of the scrum. I make light of it but it was once again an insult to loyal fans, this was how we were treated once they had our cash.

But that’s all forgotten come kick-off, underdogs against the old enemy. Then something unspeakable happened. We scored. Docherty with a bumbling, probably deflected shot. And there you have it. The Semi-final Moment. As sure as day turns into night, along it came, a few minutes after the goal. Staring us in the face, the possibility of winning hastens the concept of defeat.  In this case, more than a possibility as it turned out. The heroic efforts of the fans who roared them on were sadly unmatched by the players, a single goal margin but well beaten. And on the way back, two of our coach party failed to return. We had to wait, and as the excitement of the match disappeared, so did all the other coaches in the car park, leaving us in splendid isolation before we eventually set off. Stuck now in the heaviest traffic in Manchester and perfectly timed to reach the London-bound regular Sunday evening M1 queue that crawled from Luton, we reached the Lane at well past midnight. With another 30 miles in the car, I finally got home 22 hours after setting off. I overheard the kid in the seat next to me frantically ringing his dad, who refused to come out to the Lane to pick him up at this ungodly hour. ‘This is your lucky day’, I said. It may not have been up until then, but as luck would have it, he had chosen to sit next to the one bloke in the ground who lived in the same Kent town as he did. It added another 20 minutes but what the hell. When I was his age, I would have set off for Manchester with only the vaguest plan about getting home.

The football in semi-finals is typically of low quality and disappears quickly from the memory, whereas the atmosphere and tension is indelibly seared into the brain for all time. The 81′ game against Wolves at Hillsborough was my first FA Cup semi-final. These were the days of the football special. Rolling stock last pulled by Stevenson’s rocket was hauled out of mothballs, the exterior as brown as the stains on the seats. All toilet paper was hurled out of the window before  Watford junction. The West Ham crew waiting in the Euston ticket hall when we returned. Ah, those were the days.

We were the better team on the day and should have won but for a highly disputed penalty awarded against Glenn Hoddle for a tackle on Kenny Hibbett. It was one of those that even from my vantage point at the other end of the ground betrayed the classic hallmark of a good tackle – Hoddle slid in and the ball was well away from the opponent before he fell. The referee was Clive Thomas, a good ref undone by his inflated sense of self-importance. He loved the limelight and made Graham Poll look like a trappist monk in comparison. A contemporary match report says the game was clearly going to end up as stalemate in extra time but for me this was my first experience of the fear, every time the ball came close to our box.

It’s only now that I know that fear was a legitimate emotion on that day, not because of Andy Gray and Maxie Miller fighting desperately for each cross, sparks flying as these two formidably committed combatants slugged it out, but because of the packed terrace. For this was Hillsborough and the Leppings Lane end. During the course of the match I was pushed down from the middle side to close to the front, where your feet are below pitch level. Latecomers had already been taken along the pitch perimeter to other less crowded parts of the ground. It was the biggest crush I have ever experienced but I never felt in any danger. Far from it, at the time it epitomised that glorious elation of being part of a mass of fans, a single entity as much a part of the spectacle as any player. In my professional world, I was once trained as part of the disaster response team for a London authority. The trainer had worked with survivors of the Bradford fire and  Hillsborough, and confirmed that on that day Spurs fans could have been enveloped in catastrophe. It was that close. If those fans had stayed in the end…who knows?

At the time, no one knew, and so the emotions at the replay could not have been more contrasting. Taking over the North Bank at Highbury was the perfect setting, but don’t forget that as this was on the Wednesday following the first match, it was home late from Sheffield then up at the crack of dawn to get to the Lane, queues looping round the block to buy the replay tickets on Sunday morning. We had it hard in those days. And to think you were complaining about the wait on the net to get onto ticketmaster. As the exception that proves the rule, we played very well and were always going to win. Crooks’ second was a gem, a looping arced pass from Hoddle, into his stride perfectly, struck with a fraction of backspin that made it hold up just right. Villa banged in a long range third and we baited ‘Hibbett, Hibbett what’s the score?’ Great fun.

Then two trips to Villa Park, first in ’82 when we made hard work of finishing off Leicester, who obliged in the end with a crazy 20 yard own goal, and then in 87 with a straightforward win versus lowly and injury hit Watford. Sound familiar in any way…?  Football is a blessed escape from the real world but in ’82 there was no relief. As we drove up the M1 on a blissful sunny day, hot air balloons on the horizon, full of hope and expectation, we listened to the Commons debate on going to war in the Falklands. Part semi-final, part farewell to the magnificent Ossie Ardilles, one of theirs yet one of our own. We cared for and cherished him, yet now a goodbye was forced upon us. He played well and left the field to an ovation, his mind on other matters. In the end we had the chance to see him once more in our colours.

I watched the Everton and Newcastle matches in ’95 and ’99 on television. These were during my dark ages, where famine and pestilence raged across the land and darkness cast its shadow upon the land. In other words, the kids were young and my wife went out to work on a Saturday. Both poor games, dull dull dull.

Which leaves the best until last. The Arsenal match at Wembley was a huge deal at the time, hard to believe now but a major precedent. It was also the first time the two great rivals had met at that stage despite many years of battles (I think- haven’t checked and I’ve learned over the months of blogging  not to do that…!). The FA were clearly disoriented. They not only created a family enclosure, with discounts for kids, they put it in the prime seats on the halfway line. To show how times have changed, these are the equivalent of the club Wembley block opposite the cameras, the ones that are embarrassingly empty for the first ten minutes of the second half. If the cup had been awarded, we would have been one of those fans who lean forward to congratulate the players as they mount the steps to the Royal box and ruin their moment of the ages by giving them a silly hat.

So the scene was set, and one man was set to take centre stage. Gascoigne was not fully fit but had to play. The free kick, well, you’ve heard about it, seen it, loved it. It was an outrageous piece of chutzpah to step up. The ball left his foot, went on, and up, and on, and up, and on and up into the roof of the goal. I have shivers right now just describing that moment. The Bloke Behind Me screamed, ‘Stupid sod, he’s not going to shoot from there’, the last syllable drowned in the noise as the ball hit the net. Gazza ran towards us and leapt into the air with unconfined, heartfelt joy and we roared our approval, oh, the sound we made. Years of being second best, it came from deep down, spilling out in cathartic bedlam.

A fine performance all round that day from a determined, motivated team, 2 more from Lineker and unselfish hard work from Paul Allen. A perfect day. Spoiled the following year, when OF COURSE after all those years they had another go and won. I genuinely cannot remember any of the game, just feeling so flat on the way home. But in the end, nothing could take away an iota of the joy of ’91. Let’s hope you and I will be celebrating not suffering come Sunday evening.

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Monday Meanderings – Should Have Brought the Deckchair

A routine win. Routine and lovely and ordinary and superb and standard and welcome and oh-so-average and brilliant.

Routine. Let it roll around around the tongue. Roooo-tine. Roo-teeeeeeene. Savour the word, luxuriate in each syllable, rejoice in the concept, because nothing is ever routine at Spurs so this was such a relief. Enjoy every moment because the rest of this fantastic season is a white knuckle ride into the unknown. We won a game we were supposed to win, in the end at a canter. We didn’t play well, but well enough. It’s not usually as straightforward as this, but nothing went wrong, no mishaps or calamities, plenty in reserve. I’ll never get used to this sort of thing at Spurs.

We had a go a few times. Gomes saved well close in, once in each half, a tangle of long arms and legs and the ball bounced to safety. Excellent work, he gets down so quickly for a man able to touch the crossbar with his armpit. And Pompey helped. When you’re down, you’re down. Last man standing as the vultures with the stretcher had their best afternoon of the season. As ever, I was plutzing whenever they had possession, at least until the last few minutes. Maybe the air disturbance caused by three pigeons taking off at the Park Lane at the just the wrong moment could subtly alter the ball’s trajectory as it flies towards Gomes…

I’ll always be like this, it’s too late to do anything about it. There was, however, real potential when Portsmouth went 4-3-3 and it is as well that Huddlestone, diligently dropping back, was more alert to the danger than the crowd. The huge cheer that went up when Birmingham equalised (I assume, as apparently I was the only one looking at the ball not the screen) could have choked in the throats of a good many spectators as it coincided precisely with one of Portsmouth’s rare forays into the box. Nothing came of it but it’s not as if I want to spend £40 to watch Soccer Saturday. The Pompey fans’ quip about ‘is there a fire drill?’ greeted a deafening rumble of seats thwacking back in unison. It was funny and I wish them well for their loyalty and continued enthusiasm under impossible duress. From April 12th onwards. Until then, keep those injuries coming.

Spurs went through the motions but the spark was missing. Hud and Luka were quiet for the most part, Hud’s perfectly timed left footer aside, but the big boned one’s value is in more than just the spectacular. He works with energy and growing intelligence, particularly in the way he makes himself available for team-mates. Nice touch in the first half. Lumbering forward to join an attack, as he ran he turned and told Luka to stay back. Only one forward at a time, the right decision and more importantly he took charge of that moment.

Perhaps not the game to judge too harshly, but Bentley’s second half performance illustrated one of the faults in his game. If he does not release it fairly quickly, he tends to take it too far, right into the clutches of the opposing defenders. He doesn’t have the pace to beat them and usually not the skills either. What he does so well is whip the ball, but to do so you don’t have to beat your defender. Rather, you can push it a yard ahead and away from your man, he can’t reach it but you can wrap your foot around and curl it in. That needs to be drummed into him. Maybe he’s better in games with more edge and pace. Also, he did not link well with Walker, although that can be excused as this was presumably their first outing together. My first look at Walker in a Spurs shirt. He had a promising debut, holds himself in a well-balanced manner so he can move well and shift balance if he has to turn or move in for the tackle, tackles firmly and is decisive. Sometimes that meant that he made the wrong decision but overall I’d rather see a young man have faith in his own ability that hesitate for fear of making a mistake. His run to set up the second goal was a fine piece of play, showing also his awareness of first the space and then of better-placed team-mates as he pulled it back.

Our Saviour was another on cruise control when he came on but Superboy has only two settings, off and maximum. That move he’s working on, where he brings down a pass and leaves the ball a yard or two in front so he can run onto it. that’s real skill because some of those crossfield passes from Hud and Daws are fairly fizzing in towards him. He was absolutely terrific again, thrilling on the ball.

As relaxing an afternoon as it ever will be at the Lane and now close your eyes and dream of the glory ahead. Whatever happens at Sunderland, week beginning April 11th is the stuff of magic and mystery. It’s why we go through the rubbish and the pain, for moments like these.

But for now, Spurs stopped playing towards the end and so this column will just

Still time to enter the competition to win a copy of the book everyone wants to read, ‘Spurs Cult Heroes’. Answer 3 questions about cult heroes that might have been… see ‘Recent Posts’ opposite or scroll down a bit.

Spurs v Fulham. Can’t Sleep, But There’s Plenty To Dream About

No column planned for today, not time…but have to write. Something has to be said about our team, our infuriating magnificent frustrating spellbinding team. Something must be said.

Battle of the English managers. Honours even, one half each. My goodness, they know this game. The difference in the first half – movement. Fulham pass and move, short passes mostly, nothing ambitious, get it, keep it, allow men to move forward in support. With five in midfield and mobile, there’s an advantage in beginning the movements from a deeper position because you can see the space in front of you, and the Fulham players moved unerringly into the gaps.We are still, expectant, strikers looking on from the area’s edge.

Kranjcar coming inside, good idea, overload them in and around the box. But he’s not effective and leaves a gap out wide behind him. Konchesky and Davies into that gap, help each other out. No worries, Sgt Wilson is patrolling, he cuts them off. But if he moves right, then there’s no one in the middle, so that’s where Fulham moves end up. So clever.

Benny has one of his vague games where the effort is there but the concentration absent. Not so much away with the fairies but under the headphones. Bale’s not sure where to be, Luka should come back more quickly, and it’s the old failing of Spurs leaving too much room in front of the back four. Bassong is drawn out because there’s no one to protect him, not really his fault but he’s late, betwixt and between, Fulham not closed down and there’s a gap….Zamora sees it, a fraction later, a perfect interval, a plain simple perfect pass is inserted into that gap and beautifully taken. All that work for a single moment. Worth it.

Yes, Crouch is playing well with the long ball, staying near his team mates and finding them well. That’s what he needs, don’t drift too far away, keep it simple. Not his fault, but the long ball is not our game. Pass it and move. Only one side doing that, so frustrating, maddening. We can do better, we know better, nothing learned over the season, nothing, all thrown out of the window…

Two eager young men dance enthusiastically on the touchline. Optimism and anticipation mask the knowledge that neither is famed for their ability to seize the day. Modric told in yesterday’s Times of Harry’s fearsome half-time team talks. The paint must be blistering on the walls. The act of a brave man, substitutes this early, carrying injuries and callow youth on the bench. Or desperate.

First touch, first touch you cocky little sod, you cocky little loveable sod, believe your own hype for a while, I’ll let you. Charlie offside, Fulham fans, the ones watching on TV at any rate, must be bitter. Bentley right, Modric left, Hud passes, Wilson covers. Suddenly there’s balance and shape, comfort in this warm familiarity. Gudjohnson is right at home, welcome and step right in, it’s nice here, you’re one of us. Shrewd, canny, pass and move, look for those little chinks in the massed ranks, get behind them, they can’t see you until it’s too late. Crouchie’s working, one of us, part of the team. That’s the way.

Bale, rampaging from deep, he slots into the role like a veteran but with the enthusiasm of a puppy. Coming from there, he can’t be picked up so easily, two men on him now, one, Duff, can’t get forward any more, out of the equation so their attack is blunted and the ball doesn’t get in our half for 30 minutes. Another young full back, Kelly, shows that he did not fulfil his early promise also as an attacking defender, nervous, broken, booked then substituted.

An injury threatens to disrupt the momentum, and the shape. Pav on, where is everyone supposed to be, no defenders…sod it, attack, it’s what we do. Daws looked nervous but if the ball stays in their half, he’s OK. Pav, not fit, runs around like a pit pony released from the depths. You weren’t really that hurt on the weekend, were you? Far post volley, ridiculous from there, from nowhere. Brilliant, just brilliant.

Beautiful slaughter. Fulham picked apart. Eidur completes a breathtaking team move. The TV shows only the coup de grace, obscuring the best and most fulfilling elements, of how this goal was created from way back.

There could have been more but lest we forget, Fulham are back in it, makeshift defence, tired legs, not fully fit many of them, we’ve played our hand. One goal, perhaps that Duff shot a yard to the left, Fulham may not realise but we’ve crumbled before. But Gomes sound, finely timed interventions from Daws and Seb, and so to Wembley.

Got to give it to you, Harry, and Hud in the middle, unspectacular but you did all that was asked of you, pass it and move, the others worked around you. Running out of defenders but leave that one for another day. For now, enjoy. City lost, Wembley, and a game of two halves. Enjoy the morning after a special night. If you ever wonder why we do it, pay the money and take the grief, that’s why.

WIN a Copy of Spurs Cult Heroes!

Win a copy of ‘Spurs Cult Heroes’ by Michael Lacquiere, known to the likes of you and I as the author of the fab blog All Action No Plot.

The stories of 20 fans’ icons, the book is often remarkable and always entertaining. I hope there’s not too much about fake boobs, though.

My first ever freebie as a blogger and I am giving you, dear reader, the chance to win it. Not that I haven’t been offered items, oh no, but selflessly I’ve turned them all down, keeping TOMM advert-free and as pure and innocent as a new born babe, with a bottom to match.

In order to send this to you in pristine condition, I’ve not been able to review it, although I might peek inside after buying a pair of those white gloves that David Dimbleby uses to handle medieval manuscripts or ancient maps with the land of the dog-headed men, now known as Chatham.  If it is half as good as the blog, then it will be the best read of the year.

To win a copy, answer these questions. Replies to tottenhamonmymind@gmx.co.uk, closing date next Wednesday March 31st at 8pm. First one out the hat wins. I’ve always wanted to pick a name out of a hat, you know.

The Hat. Just think, your name could be in it this time next week...

Spurs have been blessed with many cult heroes, but can you identify three more that you so nearly adored but in the end they never quite made it. We were seriously after these players but the deals fell through.

  1. A bona fide stone cold hero for country and club, in the mid 60s he could not wait to join Spurs and get away from the London team with which he will forever be associated. But his board said ‘no’ and punished him by keeping his wages down.
  2. This saintly hero was rumoured to be on his way for a couple of years and even the bloke behind me confirmed the deal. His style was perfect for Spurs but then his fiancée said she didn’t want to come to London, so he stayed a one club man on the south coast. All I can is, I hope she was worth it.
  3. This man achieved iconic status in the 70s but for one of our bitter rivals. Medicals completed, he was on the point of joining us when one of the cult heroes featured in the book pinched him at the last moment. See how it all fits together?